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  • The most famous of the group

  • that broke the German Enigma machine codes

  • was Alan Turing.

  • He was one of those people

  • who seem to be one step ahead of the rest of us

  • in the fields of math and science.

  • He and the team at Bletchley Park,

  • a top secret center dedicated to codebreaking during the war,

  • helped turn the tide of the conflict

  • by decrypting the Nazi's most difficult codes.

  • Turing was born in 1912, the second of 2 brothers.

  • As a young man, Turing was incredibly intelligent, and athletically gifted.

  • He rode his bike everywhere.

  • He rode 60 miles to his boarding school on his first day,

  • stuck far away by a train strike.

  • He made it on time.

  • The school didn't always recognize Turing's talents.

  • He was almost stopped from taking the school certificate

  • due to concerns that he would fail.

  • While he excelled in science, his headmaster said

  • "If he is to be solely a Scientific Specialist, he is wasting his time at a Public School.”

  • In 1928 Turing met a new classmate called Christopher Morcom.

  • The 2 young men became very close friends.

  • They would also explore intellectual problems in physics and maths together.

  • They would be seen passing notes to each other during class.

  • The 2 boys were very close and at this time

  • Alan supposedly developed a crush on Christopher.

  • Their friendship was not to last though

  • as in 1930 when Alan was 17 years old,

  • Christopher died of tuberculosis.

  • After his friend's death Alan threw himself into trying

  • to unravel the nature of consciousness

  • and how it was linked to matter.

  • This led Alan to think about the concept of the mind

  • as a machine that could be recreated with mathematical logic.

  • Turing attended Kings College, Cambridge

  • He received a distinguished degree in 1934 and a Fellowship of King's College in 1935

  • He attended Princeton University for a couple of years

  • returning to England just prior to the war.

  • As war broke out in Europe in 1939, Turing went to work

  • for the British Cryptanalytic Headquarters at Bletchley Park.

  • The people at Bletchley Park, worked 24 hours a day

  • to break a variety of German codes and give the Allies prior knowledge of German intentions

  • to be used on the battlefields, skies and oceans andseeinside the German Reich

  • to try to understand the workings of the murderous regime.

  • At Bletchley, Turing was known to be somewhat eccentric.

  • He would ride to work in a gas mask to protect him from pollen.

  • His bike had a bad chain, and instead of replacing it,

  • he kept time in his head, counting out the pedal rotations it would take

  • before it fell offthen repairing it before it did.

  • He would also chain his mug to a radiator

  • to avoid it getting taken by someone else.

  • InHut 8”, Turing who was always referred to asProf

  • and his team elaborated upon the early computer designed by Poles

  • working to break the German Enigma machine codes.

  • With this work and Turing's ability to see patterns and equations,

  • the team in Hut 8 began to break additional German codes,

  • most famously, the U-boat codes, which ordered the German submarine fleet

  • towards their victims and hunting grounds.

  • As the war progressed, and the cyphers became more complex,

  • Turing and the team at Bletchley invented more complicated machines

  • to rapidly decrypt the German communications.

  • At it's peak Bletchley was decrypting 84,000 communications each month.

  • After WWII, Winston Churchill called the submarine threat

  • the only thing that really scared him during the war.

  • Though many worked on this problem and others, without Alan Turing,

  • the solution to the problem might have taken much longer

  • (time which the allies did not have), or may not have even happened at all.

  • His work undoubtedly shortened the war and saved many lives.

  • It also laid the groundwork for the technological age we live in today.

  • For his work during the war, Turing was awarded

  • the Order of the British Empire by the King,

  • but this, like his work, remained secret for years.

  • Turing was gay, and in the decades before itsde-criminalizationin 1967,

  • homosexuality was persecuted and prosecuted in England as well as many other nations.

  • After WWII, and as the Cold War began toheatup,

  • Turing was arrested forgross indecency".

  • Taking a guilty plea, Turing was offered prison or conditional probation.

  • He took probation.

  • As a condition of the probation

  • he had to take large doses ofhormone therapy".

  • The aim was to render him physically incapable of having sex,

  • and the treatment had terrible side-effects on his health and wellbeing.

  • After his conviction, he was barred from doing any further government work

  • and his security clearance was revoked.

  • His past was subject to investigation, as the authorities were worried

  • that his homosexuality could have been used as blackmail by the Soviet Union.

  • No evidence of which has ever been found.

  • On June 8th, 1952, Turing's housekeeper found his body.

  • A half eaten apple which was never checked for poison

  • and a “To Dolist was by his bedside.

  • The official cause of death was suicide

  • though many have cast doubt upon this conclusion.

  • In the years following his death,

  • Turing's work became more and more recognized by the public

  • and a groundswell of support to rectify the injustice of Turing's life came to the fore.

  • In 2009 after intense lobbying the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom

  • made an apology for the treatment of Turing but he was not officially pardoned.

  • The UK justice minister said that a pardon wasnot considered appropriate

  • as Alan Turing was properly convicted of what at the time was a criminal offence".

  • In 2012 many influential people including Stephen Hawking

  • lobbied the UK government to officially pardon Turing.

  • In 2013 The Queen gave Turing a Royal pardon.

  • The prime minister David Cameron said:

  • "His action saved countless lives.

  • He also left a remarkable national legacy

  • through his substantial scientific achievements,

  • often being referred to as the father of modern computing."

  • Stephen Fry, said at the time:

  • At bloody last. Next step a banknote if there's any justice!”

  • In 2014, the movieThe Imitation Gamestarring Benedict Cumberbatch and Keira Knightley

  • was released, depicting Turing's struggles,

  • and lending impetus to a new realization of his genius and knowledge of his persecution.

  • In June, 2019, the British government announced

  • that Turing's likeness would be placed on the £50 note.

  • A small comfort to those who knew and supported Turing.

  • The note contains an appropriately enigmatic quote from Turing.

  • This is only a foretaste of what is to come, and only the shadow of what is going to be.”

The most famous of the group

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B1 中級 美國腔

艾倫・圖靈(Alan Turing - betrayed by the country he saved)

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    前鎮高中老師 發佈於 2022 年 03 月 30 日
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